Deacon Sampson (Ryan) R. Nash, M.D., delivered a lecture titled "Humbly Human: On the Promise and Peril of Artificial Intelligence, Rights, and Ethics" during the PHAICON 2024 conference. This event took place from November 18 to 21, 2024, in Athens, Greece. The PHAICON 2024 conference was organized by the Saint Maxim the Greek Institute, focusing on the theme "Post-Humanism and Artificial Intelligence."
Summarize:
AI's Impact on Medicine and Ethics
AI in medicine raises bioethical concerns about its effects on rights language, medical practice, and the field of ethics itself, necessitating helpful policy development.
The Turing test highlights AI's inherent deception, as it measures a machine's ability to mimic human intelligence rather than possess genuine consciousness or wisdom.
Transhumanism and Technology
Transhumanism seeks technological salvation and eternal existence, contradicting the Christian belief that Christ has already conquered death.
Technology's integration into human identity may have immortal consequences in the resurrection, despite the likely fictional nature of achieving full eternalized existence.
Ethical Considerations and Resistance
Current AI trends often promote mortality and death, both physical and spiritual, contrary to transhumanist goals of enhancing human life.
Resisting AI's negative influences requires digital fasting, embracing silence and reading, and fully engaging in the liturgical and communal life of the church.
The Rev. Dn. Sampson (Ryan) Nash, MD, MA is the Hagop S. Mekhjian, MD, Endowed Chair in Medical Ethics and Professionalism and the Director of The Ohio State University Center for Bioethics and Medical Humanities. He also holds appointments as adjunct Professor of Christian Ethics at St. Tikhon’s Orthodox Theological Seminary and Professor of Medicine at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary. In addition to being an active educator, administrator, and serving as a healthcare ethics and clinical bioethics advisor and consultant, Dr Nash continues to be active in Palliative Medicine caring for patients primarily with advanced cancer. Dr Nash’s scholarship focuses on practical, procedural, and policy issues related to Medicine, Clinical Bioethics and Palliative Medicine. He also explores ethics foundations at the nexus of medicine, ethics, theology, religion, and culture. Dn Sampson serves at St. Gregory of Nyssa Orthodox Church (OCA) in Columbus, Ohio. He is the grateful husband of Sarah and proud father of four daughters. He occasionally helps them run their small farm north of Columbus. Dr. Nash received his medical degree from the University of Texas Medical School at Houston and his master’s degree in Bioethics from Trinity International University. He completed an internal medicine residency at the University of Texas Medical School, a fellowship in palliative medicine at the University of Alabama School of Medicine and was a fellow and visiting scholar at the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine. Dr. Nash has been recognized as a Fellow of the American College of Physicians, Fellow of the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Care, and Fellow in the Academy of Fellows of the Center of Bioethics and Human Dignity. He has repeatedly been named to the “America’s Best Doctors” and “World’s Best Doctors” lists.
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